Results 171 to 180 of about 741 (200)
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Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 1957
Needless to say the Amharic speakers also have close contact with the speakers of the other Semitic Ethiopic languages as well as of the Cushitic languages. Nearly all the Semitic Ethiopic and Cushitic languages have many Arabic loanwords for the same reasons mentioned above in connexion with Amharic.
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Needless to say the Amharic speakers also have close contact with the speakers of the other Semitic Ethiopic languages as well as of the Cushitic languages. Nearly all the Semitic Ethiopic and Cushitic languages have many Arabic loanwords for the same reasons mentioned above in connexion with Amharic.
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THE PECULIARITIES OF TEACHING ARABIC LOANWORDS IN ENGLISH
Конференции, 2021English vocabulary has been developing by different linguistic categories and rules. One of them is considered to be loan words. Thus, this work deals with English borrowed words from Arabic language and its linguistic characteristics in teaching. Mostly, these words can be used in daily life routine either food or clothing.
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Lexical Innovation of Arabic Loanwords
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2020This study focuses on the analysis of Arabic loanwords in the Bedawie language. It aims to determine the changes that have occurred and pedagogical contributions offered by the use of Arabic loanwords in Bedawie. Our analysis of these loanwords speculates on the possible explanations of the research problem.
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Vowel Epenthesis in Arabic Loanwords in Hausa
International Journal of Linguistics, 2015<p>Vowel epenthesis is discussed in this paper as a phonological process utilized to avoid codas in Arabic loanwords in Hausa language in light of Optimality Theory (OT), as an analytical framework, even though this language permits codas in heavy syllables of the form CVC (Caron, 2011). This process results in having disyllabic, trisyllabic, or
MUFLEH ALQAHTANI, Rebecca Musa
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Morphosyntactical Analysis of Arabic Loanwords
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2020Beja, the subject of this paper, are people speaking a language called – Bedawiet – in the Red sea Hills in north-eastern of Sudan, (Dahl, 1991). They are in the region for thousands of years along the coast from Egypt to Eretria. The paper emphasizes on the analysis of Arabic loanwords in the Beja language. The work aims at analyzing the morphology of
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The Arabic Loanwords in Nabatean Aramaic
Journal of Near Eastern Studies, 1986THE 4,000 Nabatean texts cover a remarkable range of territory-from the area of Bostra over to the Sinai and down into northern Arabia-and document the history of the region in a variety of ways.' Among the most remarkable historical witnesses in the Nabatean corpus is a lintel inscription from the isolated shrine site of Rawwiafah, a Greek and ...
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Hebrew Loanwords in Written Palestinian Arabic
Hebrew loanwords have penetrated not only spoken Palestinian Arabic (PA) but also written PA. Using original corpora, this dissertation examines the semantic categories, relative distribution, and linguistic adaptation, of Hebrew loanwords (HLs) written in Arabic script on digital platforms.
Hamed, Rudaina
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Arabic loanwords in seven Ethiopian languages
Brill’s Journal of Afroasiatic Languages and Linguistics, 2021Abstract Within the Theory of Constraints and Repair Strategies (Paradis, 1988a,b; Paradis & LaCharité, 1993, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2008, henceforth TCRS), we provide a formal analysis to the Arabic loanwords in seven languages spoken in Ethiopia: Ge’ez, Tigre, Tigrinya, Amharic, Harari, Argobba and Gurage. The analysis draws upon a corpus of
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Arabic Loanwords in Argobba (South Ethiopic)
Journal of the American Oriental Society, 1957almost certaillly to be dated before the historical fact discussed here. Thus the solution of the problem must involve ordinary people as well as the dynasty and aristocracy. A. F. L. Beeston's suggestion is intended to confirm N. Rhodokanakis's opinion.
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